Yes, way too many variables to answer that question. But, I will give you an example mainly because I just cut some last night. I had a storm-downed oak, 36" diameter at the base, that i tackled with my dad last night. Took us about 3 hours to get 1.5 cords out of it. The rest I will get by myself this week and that will probably take me 3 more hours alone to get the other 1.5 cords. So, about 9 manhours to get 3 cords out of a downed tree. Plus another manhour to unload the trailer. Maybe another manhour to split the bigger stuff. Didn't load anything smaller than 4" in diameter and won't split anything smaller than 10" in diameter. I'd say for a downed tree we spent about 4 manhours per cord. Some may be faster. Some slower.

16 to 20 hours cutting and moving, 20 hours to split and stack for about 10 to 12 cord a year. most of the time me and another helper but not always. The savings pays me 60 - 75 dollars an hour or more if I work faster and I keep the house much warmer than I did on oil or propane:)

about 4 hours per cord for me from turning the key on the new Holland tractor. driving about 1/4 to 1/2 mile in the woods cutting down 4-6 trees dragging them to landing cutting them up to 12' length running threw processor into dump truck then stacking in pile and waking in house . my normal sat april -may

All depends on whether we are cleaning fencerows and mostly dealing with small stuff or are dealing with real trees.

I cheat as well, if we are slow I'll have the help running a couple of saws while I carry anything up worth cutting with the grapple on the skid steer. Big stuff gets piled separately until I have enough of a pile to spent an afternoon splitting it all with a skid steer mounted splitter.

My schedule is a lot like Jcl's, I work on mine mainly in the spring as soon as the snow will melt enough to let me get in the woods easily. Usually on weekends and a few weeknights, in this way it seems like it takes weeks but overall I don't hit it hard on any one particular day, saves on my old back!

The other thing I've learned in my second season, is there is "easy gettin' wood" and "hard gettin' wood." Hard gettin' wood is that beautiful healthy red oak that blew down 100' inside the fence line. But, you have to cut the fence, pull posts, cut down and buck 4 little trees, get the splitter back there, and load the wood out in the back of your truck in 3 trips, then transfer to a trailer on the lane, then haul it home, unload and stack it in place. Easy getting wood is the guy that calls and says "hey, i just cut up this tree, you want it? It's right next to the road." And then all you do is load it on the trailer and take it home! Same amount of wood, only one load too 10 hours and the other took 2! Last year I had a BUNCH of easy gettin', this year, not so much!!

The other thing I've learned in my second season, is there is "easy gettin' wood" and "hard gettin' wood." Hard gettin' wood is that beautiful healthy red oak that blew down 100' inside the fence line. But, you have to cut the fence, pull posts, cut down and buck 4 little trees, get the splitter back there, and load the wood out in the back of your truck in 3 trips, then transfer to a trailer on the lane, then haul it home, unload and stack it in place. Easy getting wood is the guy that calls and says "hey, i just cut up this tree, you want it? It's right next to the road." And then all you do is load it on the trailer and take it home! Same amount of wood, only one load too 10 hours and the other took 2! Last year I had a BUNCH of easy gettin', this year, not so much!!

I hear that, I bought a old International pickup years ago just for the PTO operated winch on the front, a lot easier to drag the tree out in the open and work on it.